A Songbird for St. Patricks Day

Sunday, beautiful Sunday. After six days of work, I get to rest on the seventh. Today there will be no talk of the weather. Oh, except for this – W flew off to BC yesterday and sent me the following text:

Made it okay. Beautiful here! No snow, green grass!

Men can be so heartless and cruel. I sent him a text back suggesting he buy us a house there. I hope he gets rained on. And then I hope the rain heads east and some green things happen here at last.

My grandfather on my mother’s side of the family had roots in Ireland, so I always think of him on the 17th of March. I don’t think you have to be Irish to celebrate St. Patrick’s day, you just have to be okay with green beer.

As so often happens when I spend time on YouTube looking for something specific (in today’s case Irish or Celtic music) I get completely sidetracked to the point where it’s like that degrees of separation game and even I can’t remember what brought me to wherever I ended up. Which at this particular moment in time would be with Chris de Burgh.

Chris de Burgh (born Christopher John Davison, 15 October 1948) is an Argentinian born British-Irish singer-songwriter. He is most famous for his 1986 love song “The Lady in Red“, which reached number-one in Belgium, Canada, Ireland, Norway, and the United Kingdom. (Wikipedia)

Too bad he didn’t sing Lady in Green; but this song is close enough. It’s a lovely tribute to Eva Cassidy. Hope it doesn’t make you cry in your Irish beer.

I heard a voice so pure and easy, a songbird singing for me,
I had no choice, only to listen, and surrender to her world;
And she will fly over the rainbow,
She will walk in fields of gold,
And when she sings from the high walls of Heaven,
Will the angels cry like me?

At first alone, then with hundreds around me,
Enchanted by her song,
But as the day is done, and the darkness is falling,
The songbird sings no more;

And now she flies over the rainbow,
And she walks in fields of gold,
And when she sings from the high walls of Heaven,
Will the angels cry like me?

And when she sings from the high walls of Heaven,
Will the angels cry like me, will the angels cry like me?

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6 thoughts on “A Songbird for St. Patricks Day”

Oh, thank you for introducing me to Chris De Burgh, and as a huge Eva Cassidy fan, I fell in love with the song, immediately. Frankly, it’s his voice and the song itself, even without the Eva Cassidy tribute but still…. Thanks so much.
Karen

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